ADOPT A TREE KANGAROO

Become a ZooParent

TREE KANGAROO CONSERVATION PROGRAM

Wild tree kangaroo joey with mother at Wasaunon research site, Papua New Guinea. Photo by Bruce Beehler, Conservation International

About the Project

The Tree Kangaroo Conservation Program (TKCP) is Woodland Park Zoo’s signature international long-term field conservation program. Director Dr. Lisa Dabek began TKCP in 1996 as a conservation research study to determine the status of the endangered Matschie’s tree kangaroo on the Huon Peninsula of Papua New Guinea (PNG). With habitat protection the primary objective, the tree kangaroo became an ideal flagship species. Since indigenous landowners own and control over 90% of the land in PNG, long-term habitat protection requires conservation awareness and commitment from local landowners.

TKCP developed a community-based strategy providing benefits and an improved standard of living for local communities, with indigenous landowners and community members participating in scientific research, land mapping, education and conservation outreach activities. The work of TKCP is focused on the northern Huon Peninsula in the YUS Local Level Government Area (Yopno-Uruwa-Som watersheds) of the Kabwum District in Morobe Province of Papua New Guinea. The YUS area includes more than 45 villages representing more than 12,000 people.

In 2009, the program reached a critical milestone. The PNG government officially approved the Yopno-Uruwa-SOM (YUS) Conservation Area, marking the first use of PNG’s highest level of protection for forests and wildlife, which prohibits any form of resource extraction, including commercial mining and logging. Now that the YUS Conservation Area is officially protected, TKCP is building local capacity so that indigenous communities can take on long-term, sustainable management of the land.

Conservation Action

Forming a Non-Governmental Organization in Papua New Guinea

Great progress was made during 2012 in registering TKCP as a legal PNG Non-Governmental Organization (NGO). Staff met with lawyers from the Centre for Environmental Law and Community Rights, developing a constitution and identifying the process for setting up the first board. In addition, TKCP and WPZ met with attorneys in Seattle to make sure that legal considerations were addressed from both the U.S. and PNG sides.

Even More TKCP Coffee, Please

NEWS: PNG YUS Coffee is back in stock at Caffe Vita locations as of February 2014

Though coffee has long been grown in YUS, rugged terrain has historically prevented a viable coffee market from developing in that region. Under TKCP’s livelihoods project, work has been done with extension agents from PNG’s Coffee Industry Corporation to focus on coffee growing as an income source for YUS landowners. After years of work that dream finally came to fruition when through a TKCP partnership, Seattle-based Caffe Vita introduced PNG coffee from the YUS area to their stores in February of 2012. The launch was so successful that Caffe Vita bought even more coffee for release into the Seattle market.

About Tree Kangaroos

Tree kangaroos, arboreal cousins to their familiar Australian kin, are found only in the rain forests of Australia, West Papua, and Papua New Guinea. Six of 10 species are found in Papua New Guinea, in some of the last undisturbed rainforest habitat in the world. TKCP focuses on the Matschie’s tree kangaroo (Dendrolagus matschiei), endemic to the Huon Peninsula on the northeast coast of Papua New Guinea, and especially vulnerable to extinction due to its localized status; threat of overhunting for meat and fur; and habitat disruption from logging, mining and agriculture.

In the Field

2012 saw innovation from YUS landowners including the creation of riparian corridors to protect waterways. The idea of protecting major streams and rivers for 15 meters on both banks came from landowners in Ronji Village, who noted in a land use workshop that their coral reefs were being harmed by silt from gardening on river banks in upstream communities. After the pledge by Ronji to protect the banks, the other four Wards followed suit. This is an example of how traditional communal agreements can be strengthened by increased collaboration across the landscape.

At the Zoo

In 2011 Woodland Park Zoo hosted the Tree Kangaroo Species Survival Plan (SSP) meetings. SSP programs place a focus on animals that are in danger of going extinct in the wild, believing that captive breeding may be the only chance to help the species survive. The programs help to maintain healthy and genetically diverse animal populations within the zoo community. WPZ is leading the way in breeding tree kangaroos on grounds, helping to increase the number of tree kangaroos as part of the breeding plan, and add younger, more genetically diverse animals to the captive population.